HomeMy WebLinkAbout2018-09-04 Sanford Berman Correspondence (Retention Aug 2021)• NI — ;ail •
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Friends of -the Smithsonian
Contributhigktembathip
9-4-18
Dear TF Members,
a recommendation that
Hennepin County Library
-Am,.
impadt-pdor pli no
"Many POC.
_
otd Berran
4400 MorniAside Road
Edina, MN -b5416
952 925-5738
P.S. Want more documentation?
I'll gladly supply it.
•
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RACISM, RACISM, RENT
AND REAL ESTATE:
FAIR HOUSING REFRAMED
LAU
This year marks the 50th anniversary of
the Fair Housing Act, landmark legislation
authored by Minnesota Senator Walter
Mondale. Through a multi-event series,
"Racism, Rent and Real Estate: Fair
Housing Reframed" will use the history of
and current organizing in communities
across Hennepin County to explore the
racial segregation in housing that led to
the Fair Housing Act, identify how
racialized barriers to housing still manifest
today and create the community and
political will to make change. Join us in
these cross-sector, community-centered
conversations to chart a course for
housing equity.
CONVENED BY Mapping Prejudice
Project, Minnesota Housing Partnership,
and Mill City Consulting — with more
than a dozen community partners.
Qs? CONTACT Cara Letofsky, Principal at
Mill City Consulting at 612-718-3495 or
cara@millcityconsulting.info.
LEARN MORE:
mh ponl ine.o rg/fai rho usingrefra med
Facebook:/fairhousingreframed
EVENT SERIES
A/JUNE 21: Mapping Neighborhood History:
Reclaiming and Reframing Fair Housing
Sabathani Community Center with Mapping Prejudice Project
1/ JULY 21: Housing Discrimination Revealed: History
of Race and Real Estate in Minneapolis Bus Tour
Preserve Minneapdis I Central Neighborhood
AUG 16 -JAN 20 I RECEPTION AUG 23:
[Exhibit] Owning Up: Racism and Housing
in Minneapolis
Hennepin History Museum with the U of MN
SEPT 18 AND 22: Movie: "Sold Out:
Tenants Using the Fair Housing Act to
Fight Displacement"
Central Minneapolis and Brooklyn Park libraries
OCTOBER 10: Critical Conversation on
Racism, Rent, and Real Estate
Urban Research & Outreach-Engagement
Center and Mapping Prejudice
OCTOBER 16: From Redlining to
Predatory Lending: The Racial Wealth Gap
Mpls Urban League with Jewish Community
Action
OCTOBER 25: The Future of Fair
Housing: Where Do We Go From Here?
Sabathani Community Center with MN Housing
Partnership and others
SPONSORED BY
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Racial covenants were used to bar
people who were not white from
buying or occupying property in
Minneapolis. These discriminatory
deeds underpinned an invisible
system of American apartheid.
We are building a map to document
this history. We need your help.
:4-StarTribune
THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 2018 STARTRIBUNE.COM/LOCAL • SECTION B
MINNESOTA LOCALT.G
Mayor: No more late fees at library
Plan would make St. Paul
among the first in state to
implement such a policy.
By JAMES WALSH
james.walsh@startribune.com
Toni Carter watched her
Son the mayor bounce with
excitement as he announced
an amnesty for 51,000 St.
Paul library cardholders
who owe money for over-
due books.
"He's abook guy," explained
the longtime Ramsey County
commissioner.
St. Paul Mayor Melvin
Carter's proposal would wipe
the slate clean for delinquent
cardholders whose rights to
borrow have been revoked
since 2009. Carter not only
wants to forgive more than
$2.5 million in accumulated
fees, he wants to eliminate late
fees altogether. He is asking
the City Council to approve
$215,000 in additional library
funding for 2019 to replace
revenue collected each year
in fines.
"That will unlock the
doors to our libraries, so that
we can truly say that every-
one in our community is wel-
come at the St. Paul Public
Library and that everyone in
our community can afford to
check out a book from the St.
Paul Public Library," Carter
said to applause Wednesday
at the Rondo Community
Library.
Carter has proposed a total
library budget for 2019 of $20
million, a 3.2 percent increase
from this year. If the City
Council approves Carter's
plan in October, officials say
that St. Paul will join Wash-
ington County and other cities
outside Minnesota, including
St. Paul Mayor
Melvin Carter's
plan would
forgive $2.5M
in outstanding
charges.
Salt Lake City, Nashville and
Eau Claire, Wis., in eliminat-
ing late fees.
For years, St. Paul Public
Library staff members have
discussed eliminating late
fees as a way to make the
library accessible to every-
one. After more than six
months of research, includ-
ing interviews with library
users, Carter joined forces
with library staff to propose
doing away with the fees.
Library users would still be
asked to pay for lost or dam-
aged items.
The mayor, who as a child
spent hours curled up with
books at the public library
near his house, said he met
many people across the city
who admitted they haven't
been to the library in years
because of late fees. It's time,
he said, to let them come
back
"Between the covers of a
See BOOKS on B8 ►
refuse to let a child check out
a book because a member of
his or her family has overdue
fines.
The mayor's proposal, Rag-
land said, "will change lives in
a way that I don't even think
we can understand. This will
be so incredible."
Carter said widespread
access to a. strong library
system is at the center of his
administration's three pil-
lars: public safety, by giving
children positive places to go
and activities to do; lifelong
learning, by giving adults
access to information; and
economic justice, by being
conduits for people starting
businesses or doing their
taxes.
"The library is so much
more than a collection of
books," Carter said. "This is a
center of the community?'
James Walsh • 612-673-7428
"That will unlock the doors to our
libraries, so that we can truly say that
everyone in our community ... can
afford to check out a book."
St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter, on plan to eliminate late fees
-4 BOOKS from B1
good library book every sin-
gle child in every single part of
our city can travel the world —
from the bottom of the ocean
to the edge of the galaxy, and
back. ,For free," Carter said.
"But, you know what? That's
not really the case."
Nearly one in five St.
Paul library cardholders are
blocked because of overdue
fines, staff research showed.
At the Rondo library, more
than a third of registered
cards are blocked, in keeping
with research that showed the
percentage of blocked cards
is higher in poorer neighbor-
hoods.
Because of the long-stand-
ing practice oflevying fines for
overdue books and then revok-
ing privileges for unpaid fmes,
library workers said many
families have been forced to
choose betweenpaying library
fines or paying for other neces-
sities.
Pang Yang, a library proj-
ect manager who said she
has worked at every library
in the city, recalled a young
mother with three children
coming into the library who
had accumulated fines for a
book she'd probably checked
out as a teenager and forgot-
ten. She was there to get books
for her daughter for the start
of school.
"As I was telling her about
the fmes, I could see the physi-
cal anxiety take over her body,"
Yang said, saying she later over-
heard the mother and daugh-
ter trying to decide between
paying the fines or getting din-
ner. "People shouldn't have to
decide what they are going
to feed: their bellies or their
brains."
Antwan "A.J." Ragland, who
works at the Arlington Hills
Library, said the issue hits low-
income families the hardest —
families whose primary access
to books and other informa-
tion is through the library.
He said it's heartbreaking to
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RACISM AND HOUSING IN MINNEAPOLIS
Owning Up
[ohn] /ap/
Phrasal verb
1. To recognize or admit to something wrong or shameful
2. A process of taking responsibility for actions (direct and indirect) that continue
to perpetuate, reinforce, and codify the wrong action.
3. A reference to the upward financial mobility of homeownership;
some can "own up" while others cannot
This exhibit is part of the event series Racism, Rent and Real Estate:
Fair Housing Reframed
Support for this exhibit was provided by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation; Augsburg's
Design & Agency; Hennepin History Museum; Heritage Studies and Public History Program,
University of Minnesota; Mapping Prejudice Project, University of Minnesota Libraries;
Minnesota Historical Society; and Sabathani Community Center.
RACISM AND HOUSING IN MINNEAPOLIS
AUG 23" - JAN 20°2019 I Hennepin History Museum, 2303 3rd Ave S, Minneapolis, 55404
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